WiFi access (in 2010) with 900 or so geeks was terrible, I imagine
even more so with 1200. Is there anything that we as attendees can do
and/or the Kalahari can do to help us help ourselves? I am not wise
in the ways of public facing WiFi, but I thought I would put the
question out there.
-Corey
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It would be really helpful if attendees were courteous and avoided
downloading the iOS SDK, streaming video, grabbing torrents, etc. during
conference hours. There's only so much infrastructure and service work we
can do...
If you have work that's critical and you absolutely require connectivity,
then please do bring gear to tether, use your own smartphone hotspot, or
some similar setup.
Jim
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Please be courteous and don't do audio or video or download giant SDK while on codemash network. Take a few hours on Tuesday or Wednesday as your own pre-conf day and think about what kinds of things you may need. rvm install your base stuff. Get the latest linux iso. Grab that new MSDN release.
Then we will all have enough shared data for email, twitter and small repo push/pull to/from github, bitbucket and launchpad during the conference.
--
j
Many of us have our phones configured to automatically pick up an open
WiFi when it sees it, since it uses less battery and is often a faster
download. This may be true at home or the local Starbucks, but when 1200
phones are also trying to connect to the open WiFi, then not so much.
Also, at CodeMash you're never more than the nearest wall away from
being able to charge your device, so just bring your charger with you.
I would suggest that we all do everyone else a favor and keep our phones
off the WiFi.
--
Jay Harris
If you know you're attending a workshop or session that may be immediately helpful to you (which I hope they all are), see if the presenter has put together any notes of what you should download to make your life more useful. Last year I attended one of the precompiler sessions and I pulled down the Azure SDK and AWS tools in advance. My life was very easy from that point forward. The same thing has happened to me at a bunch of other conferences, too. Be prepared, download everything you think you need before hand (think of it like stocking up on ebooks before getting on a long flight without wifi).
---
Jeremiah Peschka - Founder, Brent Ozar PLF, LLC
Microsoft SQL Server MVP
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:11 AM, Nick Portelli <portel...@gmail.com> wrote:
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Michael Letterle
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http://blog.prokrams.com
We'll have info on that up and available shortly, as will we the list of all
prerequisites so folks can get started ahead of time too.
john
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See my photography at http://flickr.com/johncrider
+1.
We’re paying a hefty amount of money for a bandwidth plusup in the conference venue area.
From: code...@googlegroups.com [mailto:code...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jason Follas
Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2012 11:41 AM
To: code...@googlegroups.com
Perhaps the kind folks at the Kalahari would refer you to the contractor that set it up. Generally I would say it was enough access points, distributed evenly throughout the building, and making effective use of all wifi channels.
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To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/codemash/-/R7PhlFlrPf4J.
For those who may not have known, the Kalahari loaned us a webserver
for CodeMash. We mirrored the entire www.codemash.org site on the
local Kalahari webserver and they redirected all requests on their
network for "codemash.org" to that machine. This made access to the
main site as well as the RSS feeds for all of those mobile apps
super-fast.
CodeMash is not only one of THE best conferences around, it's held at
a magnificent venue that is very tech-friendly!
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Patrick Steele
http://weblogs.asp.net/psteele